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OCR A-Level English Literature Coursework - Literature post-1900

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Examples of the OCR A-Level non-exam assessment coursework on Literature post-1900. This candidate wrote a comparative essay on Tom Stoppard's 'Arcadia' and Ian McEwan's 'Atonement', together with a re-creative writing piece with commentary . The essays were awarded near full marks.

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Escrito en
2018/2019
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Comparative Coursework: Arcadia Tom Stoppard and Atonement Ian McEwan

‘The future is disorder.’ Compare ways Stoppard and McEwan present the effects of order and

disorder in Arcadia and Atonement.




In modern literature, there is often a fierce tension between predestination and free will. This is

particularly evident in ​Arcadia1 by Tom Stoppard and ​Atonement2 by Ian McEwan where the




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desire for order is central to the modern texts. The idea of a disordered future is explored in

​Arcadia, Valentine states: ‘The future is disorder… It’s the best possible time to be alive, when

almost everything you thought you knew is wrong.’ How can there be an exact order to our lives

when the weather cannot be correctly predicted in twenty-four hours? As humans, we are
20
comforted by order and the old, Newtonian certainties. For the character of Briony in

​Atonement, determinism is a kind of artistic choice. McEwan portrays her as a novelist who

plays with narrative structures: what works and what does not work. However, chaos theorists
EM

argue that there are situations where order ceases to function. According to Carnot’s second law

of thermodynamics, ‘the entropy of the universe can only increase.’3 The natural state of the

universe is chaos set against the human desire to impose order.



Arcadia is a play with an ‘extraordinarily rich concentration of wordplay and loopy

misunderstandings.’4 The play moves through a wall of time, from the ordered to the disordered,



1
Stoppard, T. (1993). Arcadia. London: Faber & Faber.
2
McEwan, I. (2002). Atonement. London: Vintage.
3
Feynman, R. (1969). Feynman Lectures, vol. I (46-8, -9).
4
Leithauser, B. (2013). Tom Stoppard’s “Arcadia,” At Twenty. The New Yorker.
1

,as though two parallel plays are taking place 180 years apart in the same room where ‘time is so

supple and an elusive medium.’5 Stoppard stresses through scenes set in 1993 that what may be

a trivial event in 1809 and 1812 can be interpreted to have important consequences as time

progresses. In the denouement, the two worlds combine and there is an obvious stress on what

goes from ‘classical calm to romantic chaos.’6 Arcadia begins with an apparent order,

particularly stressed by the interrelation of the past and the present together. Arguably, this order

is eroded and fades throughout time. However, where chaos apparently occurs, such as in




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Thomasina’s death, Valentine argues that order is still present: ‘In an ocean of ashes, islands of

order. Patterns making themselves out of nothing.’ The table in the room is full of various

objects by the end of the play, to an outsider, this would seem disordered. According to

thermodynamics, Entropy is supreme.7 However, for the audience there is a sense of order that is
20
brought together in Stoppard’s exploration of two moments in history and, therefore, events do

not seem disordered from our perspective. Through art, science, and mathematics, a network of

order can be distinguished among the complexities of life - this is demonstrated in Thomasina’s
EM

iterated algorithms.



Whilst having a romantic temperament, Bernard also thinks linearly - ensuring that the data he

collects is from multiple sources in which he tries to impose an ordered pattern to the events, like

Briony in Atonement: ‘I've proved Byron was here and as far as I'm concerned he wrote those

lines as sure as he shot that hare.’ Unfortunately, his logic is flawed as he looks for patterns


5
Ibid.
6
Independent. (2009). Is Tom Stoppard's Arcadia the greatest play of our age?
https://www.independent.co.uk. Web. 2018.
7
Bloom, H. (2009). Tom Stoppard. Infrobase Publishing.
2

, based on his desired conclusions. The tension between order and disorder is also evident in the

garden at Sidley Park, which was in the process of changing at the beginning of the play. The

redesign of the park ‘represents the intellectual shift in Europe at the time.’8 Lady Croom, from

the upper class, is obviously rather unimpressed that her classic, geometrical garden was being

demolished: ‘My hyacinth dell is to become a haunt for hobgoblins.’ The garden was redesigned

in a typically Romantic style, following on from what was popular in Europe at the time.

Previously, the style would be seen as distasteful as it seems disorderly. Hannah describes the




18
garden she sees as ‘the Gothic novel expressed in landscape. Everything but vampires.’ Notably,

Hannah admires symmetry, logic and the Enlightenment - similarly to Briony in Atonement. It is

Hannah’s view that causes her to be at odds with Bernard. Again, whilst on the surface, things

may seem disorderly, there is an order to be discovered.
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On the other hand, ‘the postmodern novel often flaunts its artificiality.’9 In Atonement, Briony’s

expression of reality is based on other texts - proving her to be an unreliable narrator. The
EM

intertextuality in Atonement forms the order that Briony likes to impose with McEwan’s

influences from Jane Austen, Shakespeare and, Lord Byron. Arguably, what is order and

disorder in Atonement is dependent on whether Briony believes it is exactly what it should be.

Much like Hannah in Arcadia who says: ‘It's wanting to know that makes us matter. Otherwise

we're going out the way we came in.’ As the unreliable narrator, Briony interprets the world in

terms of the books she has been reading, and throughout the novel, she is desperate to impose




8
Independent. (2009). Is Tom Stoppard's Arcadia the greatest play of our age?
https://www.independent.co.uk. Web. 2018.
9
Middleton, K. (2017). Atonement by Ian McEwan. English Review. Vol 28 no. 2. Pp. 21.
3
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